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Former long-term hunger striker Thaer Halahleh again imprisoned without charge or trial

Former long-term hunger striker Thaer Halahleh was once again ordered to administrative detention without charge or trial on 4 May 2017. Halahleh was ordered to six months imprisonment with no charge and no trial, on the basis of secret evidence, by the Ofer military court; his detention is indefinitely renewable.

Halahleh was seized by Israeli occupation forces on 28 April 2017 after he was ambushed by soldiers near Bethlehem as he was traveling to his home.

He has been seized by Israeli occupation forces on multiple occasions and has spent over nine years in Israeli prisons, most of them in administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial. He was most recently released in October 2016; he had been imprisoned without charge or trial since July 2014.

Halahleh engaged in a 77-day hunger strike in 2012, winning his freedom from administrative detention without charge or trial in June 2012 alongside fellow administrative detainee Bilal Diab. He was arrested again in April 2013 and released in May 2014, before being once again arrested and imprisoned without charge or trial.

Halahleh suffers from Hepatitis C, contracted during a dental operation in Israeli prisons where improper sterilization was used. During his previous imprisonment, Halahleh was denied family visits with his wife and children for seven months, and received only painkillers as treatment for his illness.

Thaer Halahleh is now among approximately 600 Palestinians held without charge or trial under administrative detention; the end of the policy of imprisoning Palestinians without charge or trial is a key demand of the current hunger strike launched by 1500 Palestinian political prisoners on 17 April 2017.

Palestinian prisoners’ 18th day of hunger strike: Strike grows as leaders join

On Thursday, 4 May, the 18th day of hunger strike launched by 1500 Palestinian prisoners in Israeli jails, dozens of notable leaders from all major political organizations in Israeli prisons joined the strike. Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat and fellow PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh; longest-held Palestinian prisoner Nael Barghouthi; Hamas prisoner leaders Abbas el-Sayyed, Ibrahim Hamed and Hasan Salameh; Islamic Jihad leader Ziad Bseiso; and dozens more launched their strike on Thursday morning.

Palestinian hunger strikers are demanding the implementation of basic human rights, including an end to the denial of family visits, appropriate medical care and treatment, the right to continue their education, and an end to solitary confinement and administrative detention, imprisonment without charge or trial.

The accession of these leading prisoners to the hunger strike was announced in a major press conference held by all Palestinian factions jointly and simultaneously in Ramallah and in Gaza City, at which a statement was issued detailing the collective commitment to escalate the hunger strike at this time, in response to the “war against the hunger striking prisoners.”

Also among the prisoners who joined the strike on Thursday are former long-term hunger striker and imprisoned journalist Mohammed al-Qeeq; Tawfiq Abu Arqoub, imprisoned leader of the Islamic Bloc at Bir Zeit University); and Ghassan Zawahreh, former long-term hunger striker and administrative detainee from Dheisheh refugee camp, among dozens more.

On the same morning that Sa’adat joined the strike, the Handala Center for Prisoners and Former prisoners confirmed that he had been approached by Israeli intelligence in prison to negotiate on behalf of the prisoners, and that he refused to do so, emphasizing his full commitment to the demands of the prisoners and the recognition of the agreed-upon leadership of the strike, without substitution or replacement.  Various prisoners have reported attempts by the Israeli prison administration to exclude Marwan Barghouthi, identified as the representative of Fateh prisoners when they launched the strike, from negotiations.

Other prisoners also reported attempts to break the strike by engaging in separate negotiations; Abdel-Majid Shadid and Nabil Harb reported that the Israeli prison administration in Ramon and Nafha prisons had attempted to strike a separate agreement with striking prisoners to remove those prisons from the growing strike, a move that was refused by the prisoners.

The announcement of the new prisoners joining the strike was followed by a large rally of thousands in Ramallah, held near the statue of Nelson Mandela. At the strike, Fadwa Barghouthi, Palestinian lawyer and the wife of imprisoned strike leader Marwan Barghouthi, read a statement to the rally and the world from her husband.

“I am addressing you from solitary confinement, among thousands of prisoners and on their behalf, and among hundreds of prisoners who have decided to launch this hunger strike for freedom and dignity that will continue till their legitimate demands are met.

Israel can not silence us, nor isolate us, nor break us. Our will is solid and unshaken, and the occupation tested it time and time again and was unable to subdue or subjugate us and we continued to rebel against our captivity and attempts to humiliate us…

We are confident that the loyalty of the prisoners to their people and their country will be met with loyalty and that this battle is part and parcel of the battle of our people for freedom and dignity. We shall meet soon, in freedom.” Full statement at link.

More prisoners associated with the Islamic Jihad movement in Ofer prison joined the strike on Thursday as well: Hamza Abdel-Rahim Breijah, Issam Jawdat Rayyan, Mansour Mustafa Bani Odeh, Shehadeh Mohammed al-Tamari, Hammam Mohammed Hantash, Noureddine Jamal Rayyan, Ghalib Ali Asakrah, Issa Khalil Abu Arqoub, Ibrahim Hani Suman, and Eyad Salameh al-Daibes.  The PFLP announced that, aside from those mentioned above, fellow prisoners Thaer Hanani, Hamza al-Zaoum, Mohammed Ramadan, Rami Halabi, Hakim Awad, and Hindawi Hindawi were also joining the strike.

Since the strike was launched on 17 April, Palestinian prisoners engaged in the strike have faced intense repression. Strikers have been denied family and legal visits, transferred repeatedly from prison to prison, had their personal belongings and clothing confiscated, denied access to the “canteen” or prison store and denied or limited access to recreation, among other forms of repression and repeated night raids with harassment and physical abuse. The abusive transfers – especially difficult for prisoners who are in their third week of consuming only salt and water – continued on Thursday morning as 41 strikers in Ashkelon prison were transferred to Ohli Kedar prison.

After a hearing on Wednesday in the Israeli Supreme Court in response to a petition filed by Adalah and the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission, legal visits will reportedly begin on Thursday afternoon for Palestinian prisoners, as the practice of barring legal visits for all hunger strikers was once again noted to be illegal. However, these legal visits are taking place under severe restrictions and limitations that continue to violate prisoners’ rights to access lawyers. Addameer Prisoner Support and Human Rights Association reported that “the petition was approved by the court allowing three attorneys to visit, where each attorney gets to visit two hunger strikers only, that is after getting the approval of the Israeli Prison Service (IPS).”  It was also noted that the Israeli Prison Service created a list of lawyers who are “allowed” to visit the hunger strikers.

Aside from a very few visits to strikers in Ofer and Ashkelon prisons, no hunger strikers had been successfully visited by a lawyer since 17 April. On 4 May,  Palestinian lawyer Tamim Younes reported in Ma’an News that he held a legal visit with Karim Younes, a Palestinian citizen of Israel who has been held for 34 years in Israeli prisons and a strike leader held in isolation in Jalameh prison. Younes reported that Karim Younes emphasized that he remains in high spirits and that no serious negotiations had taken place with the prisoners’ leadership. He noted that despite being held with Marwan Barghouthi in isolation in Jalameh he had been forbidden to see him since being transferred there. Karim Younes emphasized the importance of Palestinian, Arab and international support for the strike, saying that it gives the strikers strength and determination to withstand the challenge. Following the legal visit, however, Younes was then reportedly transferred to isolation in Ramle Ayalon prison.

As the strike expanded, Asra Voice reported that – as threatened by far-right Israeli security minister Gilad Erdan – section 25 within the Negev desert prison is reportedly being transformed into a “field hospital” for the transfer of hunger strikers facing deteriorating health conditions, rather than transferring them to Israeli hospitals. Asra Voice reported that the Israeli prison administration intends to handle the strike internally, which places the health of the strikers even more severely at risk. Palestinian hunger strikers are threatened with force-feeding, especially if they are held in a prison “field hospital” rather than at civilian hospitals where medical staff have reportedly refused in the past to engage in nasogastric forced feeding. Palestinian hunger strikers have been subjected during previous hunger strikes to forcible treatment against their will, in violation of international medical ethics principles.  However, Israeli hospitals also reported a nationwide alert to begin preparations to receive hunger strikers.

The International Committee of the Red Cross spoke out on the issue of the denial of communications, including family visits and legal visits, for Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike, as well as the ongoing issue of denial of family visits, one of the major issues at hand in the prisoners’ hunger strike. The ICRC pointed out that under the Fourth Geneva Convention, it is Israel’s responsibility to facilitate family visits and to stop the punitive denial of family visits. It also underlined that the imprisonment of Palestinians inside Israel (in occupied Palestine ’48) violates the Fourth Geneva Convention.

On Wednesday, 3 May, three Palestinian prisoners who had been part of the strike from its beginning on 17 April were released: Awad Qureia from Yatta, Atef Alqar from Beit Fajjar and Anas al-Harash from Reihiya. All three vowed to continue their hunger strike outside prison until the prisoners achieve victory.  Fellow released prisoner Fakhri Barghouthi also continued his support strike for the fourth consecutive day.  He noted that his son is a prisoner and that he himself spent 34 years in Israeli prisons, and is committed to continue the strike until victory.

Palestinian and international actions continued in support of the hunger strikers, with events, actions and demonstrations throughout Palestine as well as solidarity strikes. Palestinian artists and cultural workers issued a call for a 24-hour hunger strike.

Meanwhile, activists around the world continued their events and actions. A hunger strike movement in Europe continued, involving activists from Turin, Italy, Manchester, England, Edinburgh, Scotland, Belgium, Switzerland, France and more. Even more organizers continued to take the #SaltWaterChallenge, highlighting the hunger strikers’ struggle, from students at the Universite Catholique du Louvain – Alma in Belgium:

to refugees and volunteers in a refugee camp on the island of Samos, Greece:

Protests and events in support of Palestinian political prisoners took place on Thursday, 4 April in Chicago, Kansas State University, London, Oslo, Belfast, Dublin, Newbridge, Glway and Nantes; on Friday, 5 April, protests and events are scheduled in Dublin, Waterford, Edinburgh, Manchester, Brussels, Rotterdam, Toronto, New York, Fort Lauderdale and more.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges ongoing and escalated action to support the strikers at this critical moment.

1) Organize or join an event in support of the hunger strikers. Protest outside your local Israeli embassy, consulate or mission, or at a public square or government building. You can drop a banner or put up a table to support the prisoners and their strike. See the list of current international events here, and add your own: send your events and actions to us at samidoun@samidoun.net, on Facebook, or use the form to tell us about your actions. Building this strong list of actions around the world will help to underline the global support for Palestinian political prisoners in their struggle for freedom, and the struggle of the Palestinian people for liberation. You can download flyers and posters for your events to support the prisoners among our resources. 

2) Hunger Strike for Justice! Join the Palestinian hunger strikers to support their demands with a symbolic one-day hunger strike in your community or on your campus. Tell us about your solidarity strike at samidoun@samidoun.net, on Facebook, or use the form.

3) Call your government officials and demand action.  Call your foreign affairs officials – and members of parliament – and urge action for the Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike.

Call your country’s officials urgently:

  • Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop: + 61 2 6277 7500
  • Canadian Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland: +1-613-992-5234
  • European Union Commissioner Federica Mogherini: +32 (0) 2 29 53516
  • New Zealand Minister of Foreign Affairs Murray McCully: +64 4 439 8000
  • United Kingdom Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson: +44 20 7008 1500
  • United States President Donald Trump: 1-202-456-1111

Tell your government: Palestinian prisoners are on hunger strike for their basic human rights – for family visits, medical care, and freedom from imprisonment without charge or trial. Governments must pressure Israel to recognize the prisoners’ demands!

4) Take action on social media! Support the hunger strike on social media. Take the #SaltWaterChallenge! Drink water and salt on video and add a message of support for the hunger strikers. Share and reshare information about the #DignityStrike.

5) Build the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Campaign! Join the BDS Movement to highlight the complicity of corporations like Hewlett-Packard and the continuing involvement of G4S in Israeli policing and prisons. Build a campaign to boycott Israeli goods, impose a military embargo on Israel, or organize around the academic and cultural boycott of Israel.

5 May, New York City: Protest to support the Dignity Strike and stop HP

Friday, 5 May
5:30 pm
Best Buy Union Square
52 E 14th St, New York City
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1873863436235482/

On Sunday, April 17 – the 43rd annual Palestinian Prisoners’ Day – 1,500 Palestinian political prisoners held by Israel launched the Strike of Freedom and Dignity, their largest mass hunger strike in five years.

Strikers face harsh repression from their Israeli jailers, including the denial of legal and family visits, isolation of strike leaders, confiscation of clothing, blankets and other personal items, and frequent raids by repressive units, often late at night.

But more prisoners to continue to join the strike, while others, including the most severely ill prisoners held in the Ramle prison clinic, have launched escalating protest steps in support of it.

On Thursday, imprisoned leaders from across the Palestinian political spectrum announced their participation in the strike.

The Palestinian prisoners’ movement and its supporters have called for international mobilization to help the strikers win their demands for family visits, adequate medical care and other basic improvements.

As the strike nears its fourth week, events to support it continue across the world.

Join American Muslims for Palestine – NJ Chapter, Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network, and other supporters of the strikers as we demand Israel release them and all 6,300 Palestinian political prisoners immediately, and that Hewlett Packard end its contracts with Israeli prisons and detention centers, occupation and security forces, and checkpoints and settlements now.

Build a growing international campaign to boycott HP over its support for Israeli crimes.

Support the Palestinian people, the Palestinian prisoners, the Palestinian Resistance, and the liberation of Palestine, from the river to the sea.

5 May, Fort Lauderdale: Rally in Solidarity with Palestinian Hunger Strike

Friday, 5 May
7 pm to 9 pm
US Federal Courthouse
299 E. Broward Blvd
Fort Lauderdale, FL
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/579931158844268/

We will rally and en masse engage in the #SaltWaterChallenge as called upon us from family members of the Palestinian political prisoners on hunger strike. We will supply the water and salt. If you want to print posters and signs, we can supply you courtesy of Samidoun, please email us at
AlAwdaSouthFlorida@gmail.com

5 May, Toronto: Call for Action to Support Palestinian Prisoners’ Demands

Friday, 5 May
3:30 pm
Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeman’s Office
344 Bloor Street West

5 to 6 pm
Israeli Consulate
180 Bloor Street West
Toronto

Protest in Toronto to support Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike and demand Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeman take action to urge implementation of the hunger strikers’ demands.

5 May, Rotterdam: Collective #SaltWaterChallenge for Palestinian Hunger Strikers

Friday, 5 May
12:00 pm
Park Bij De Euromast
Rotterdam, Netherlands
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1355110621250317/

Calling all Rotterdammers to take the Salt Water Challenge! The Hague will participate as well, as well as a challenge at the Bevrijdingsfestival in Malieveld. Amsterdam will also be doing the Salt Water Challenge.

On 17 April, on Palestinian Prisoners’ Day, about 1700 prisoners in Israeli jails began a hunger strike to draw attention to the violation of their human rights by Israel. Marwan Barghouthi, an imprisoned Fateh leader, is a leader of the strike.

Barghouthi’s son launched the #SaltWaterChallenge in solidarity with the striking prisoners – you drink a glass of water with salt, what the prisoners consume to protect their lives during the strike.

Watch the call:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tc2YtS_qryM

Alle Rotterdammers graag verzamelen voor de Salt Water Challenge.

Den Haag doet ook mee. Ook daar is de challenge op het Bevrijdingsfestival (Malieveld).

Amsterdam doet de Salt Water Challenge op 6 mei. Info volgt nog.

Op 17 april, in Palestina ‘Prisoners Day’, begonnen zo’n 1700 gevangenen in Israelische detentie aan een hongerstaking om aandacht te vragen voor hun klachten over het schenden van (mensen-)rechten door Israël. Marwan Barghouti, een Fatah-leider die enkele mensenlevens aan gevangenisstraf moet uitzitten van Israel voor misdaden die niet bewezen zijn riep alle gevangenen in Israelische detentie op om mee te doen.

Barghouti’s zoon lanceerde op 26 april de #SaltWaterChallenge om de solidariteit met de hongerstakende gevangenen te betonen. De challenge komt erop neer dat je een glas water met zout drinkt, hetzelfde als wat de gevangenen nemen. Veel mensen namen de challenge al aan.

Aarab Barghouti’s oproep:
https://youtu.be/Tc2YtS_qryM

Zoek op #SaltWaterChallenge om meer filmpjes te zien.

Wij Rotterdammers gaan dit ook doen. Met z’n allen tegelijk. Op 5 mei (Bevrijdingsdag) delen we om 12:30 in het Park bij de Euromast een gezellige gemeenschappelijke ‘lunch’ met een bekertje zout water. Alles wordt geregeld dus je hoeft alleen maar te komen. Neem gerust al je vrienden en vriendinnen mee.

De challenge wordt gefilmd en online gezet met een uitdaging aan onze all time rivalen: de Amsterdammers 🙂

Informatie over tijd en exacte plaats volgt. Meld je aan voor dit event en je krijgt vanzelf een update.

 

 

5 May, Brussels: Protest in Solidarity with the Palestinian Prisoners

Friday, 5 May
5:00 pm

Carrefour de l’Europe (near Gare Central)
Brussels, Belgium
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1035538523213311/

Solidarity protest with the Palestinian prisoners. More than 1000 Palestinian political prisoners are on hunger strike for basic human rights in Israeli prisons.

FR:

16 jours de grève de la faim pour des centaines de prisonniers palestiniens.
Leurs demandes?
De simples droits que les conventions intetnationales garantissent mais qu’Israël ignore une fois encore.
Nous demandons au gouvernement belge de faire pression sur le gouvernement israélien pour qu’il entame des négocatiations.
Nous demandons également l’arrêt immédiat du programme de coopération entre la Belgique et Israël, law train
( www.stop-law-train.be)

–> Rendez-vous vendredi 5 mai à 17H, carrefour de l’Europe (en face de la gare centrale).

NL :
Staande manifestatie in solidariteit met de palestijnse gevangenen
5 may 17 uur Europakruispunt
Meer dan 1000 Palestijnse politieke gevangenen zijn in hongerstaking om te protesteren tegen de mensonwaardige leefomstandigheden in de Israëlische gevangenissen

Organized by Association Belgo-Palestinienne, Palestina Solidariteit, Palestinian Community of Belgium and Luxembourg, with the participation of:

11.11.11
Association Belgo-Palestinienne
ABP WAPI
ABP Liège
ABP LLN
Amis du Monde-Diplomatique BE
Artistes Contre le Mur
Association des Démocrates Tunisiens au Benelux (ADTB)
L’Avenir palestinien
La coalition européenne de soutien aux Prisonniers Palestiniens
CETRI
CNAPD
CNCD-11.11.11
Comunauté palestinienne de Belgique et du Luxembourg
Club Achille Chavée
Comac (mouvement de jeunes du PTB – jongerenbeweging van de PVDA) Comac
Comité de Vigilance pour la Démocratie en Tunisie (Belgique)
CPCR
ECCP – European Coordination of Committees and Associations for Palestine
Ecolo J
ECOLO
LEF-FGE
LCR
PTB PVDA
PAC Présence et Action Culturelle
Palestina Solidariteit
Plateforme Palestine Charleroi
PJPO Mazerine
PJPO coordination Brabant Wallon
Samidoun Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network
Solidarité Socialiste Solidarité Socialiste
UPJB Union des progressites juifs de Belgique

 

5 May, Manchester: Emergency Protest – Victory to the Hunger Strikers

Friday, 5 May
6:00 pm

Piccadilly Gardens
Manchester, UK
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1269570166493644/

Support the international callout for action to support Palestinian prisoners! In the third week of the prisoners’ strike protest this Friday in Picadilly.

1500 Palestinian prisoners launched their hunger strike on Monday, 17 April to achieve a series of demands: access to public telephones, an end to the denial of family visits, proper medical care, and an end to policies of solitary confinement and administrative detention – imprisonment without charge or trial.

The strike was announced by Fateh prisoners with Barghouthi as their spokesperson. Prisoners from the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Islamic Jihad, the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Hamas, the People’s Party and others have declared participation in the strike, especially in Hadarim, Gilboa and Nafha prisons, where there is nearly unanimous participation in the strike among political prisoners.

The strikers have been met with harsh repression. Nearly all of the 1500 strikers have been denied legal visits; all have been denied family visits. Their personal belongings and clothing have been confiscated; many prisoners have even reported that the salt that they consume with water to sustain themselves has been confiscated by Israeli prison administration.

Manchester Boycott Israel Group – Victory to Palestine!
Victory to the Intifada
Fight Racism! Fight Imperialism! (FRFI) Manchester
Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network

www.frfi.co.uk
www.samidoun.net

4 May, Belfast, Dublin, Newbridge, Galway: Ireland Vigils in Solidarity with Palestinian Hunger Strikers

Belfast:
Friday, 4 May
12 pm

Outside QUB Lanyon Gates (facing the Student Union)
Queens University, Belfast
Facebook Event: https://www.facebook.com/events/455302108152034/

Dublin:
Friday, 4 May
5 pm

The GPO, O’Connell Street
Dublin
More information: http://www.ipsc.ie/event/dublin-vigil-in-solidarity-with-palestinian-hunger-strikers-ipsc

Newbridge:
Friday, 4 May
6 pm

Wyeth Roundabout, Buckley’s Cross
Newbridge
More information: http://www.ipsc.ie/event/newbridge-dublin-vigil-in-solidarity-with-palestinian-hunger-strikers-ipsc

Galway:
Friday, 4 May
7 pm

Eyre Square, Galway
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/1091693810934870/

On 17 April 2017 around 1500 Palestinian prisoners announced the beginning of an open hunger strike calling for an end to the state of Israel’s practice of prisoner abuse, solitary confinement, torture, medical negligence and denial of rights guaranteed under international law—including the right to a fair trial and family visits. Several Palestinian prisoners leading the hunger strike have been transferred into isolation and at the moment all striking prisoners are being denied lawyer and family visits.

Currently the state of Israel holds more than 7150 Palestinian political prisoners of which approximately 6300 are male political prisoners, 300 male children and approximately 56 females (including 13 female children) as well as an estimated 500 Palestinians in administrative detention (including 2 children), held for indefinite periods without charge or trial.

We are deeply alarmed that despite this clear injustice inflicted on the people of Palestine, European states, the European Union (EU) and representative institutions have failed to fulfill their duty to hold Israel accountable for its grave violations of international law.

Shamefully, the European Union even includes the Israeli National Police in research projects, like LAW TRAIN, funded by the EU taxpayers money, that aims to further develop interrogation techniques.

The Ireland-Palestine Solidarity Campaign expresses its support and solidarity with Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike and supports their demands.

We urge the Irish government and the European Union to intervene with the Israeli Government to: ensure it stops stop punishing the hunger strikers for their action; to lift restrictions on family visits for the prisoners; to increase visit duration from 45 to 90 minutes; to allow at least for women prisoners for family visits without glass barriers to allow mothers to hold their children; to ease restrictions on the entry of books, clothing, food and other gifts from family members; to restore educational facilities for the prisoners; to install phones to enable prisoners to communicate with their families and last but not least to substantially improve their access to medical care.

Furthermore we call for the abolition of Israel’s Apartheid Military Court system (under which only Palestinians are tried, which have a 99.7% conviction rate and which Amnesty International says “do not meet international standards for fair trial”) and freedom for all Palestinian political prisoners.

Belfast Event organized by the Justice for Palestine Society; other events organized by the Ireland Palestine Solidarity Campaign

Strike enters 17th day: Ahmad Sa’adat, Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh, more Palestinian leaders announce they will join strike on 4 May

Poster: Walls | حيطان

As Palestinian prisoners enter their 17th day of open hunger strike, a major escalation is planned to take place tomorrow, 4 May, when significant political leaders will join the hunger strike. Imprisoned Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine General Secretary Ahmad Sa’adat and fellow PFLP leader Ahed Abu Ghoulmeh will join the strike with dozens of leaders from all factions, announced former political prisoner and leftist parliamentarian Khalida Jarrar, at a joint press conference held simultaneously in Ramallah and Gaza City on Wednesday morning, 3 May.

Jarrar denounced attempts to re-start “negotiations” while the prisoners are starving for freedom, saying that anyone who wishes to speak to the leadership of the Palestinian people should go to the prisons to find that leadership and meet with them. She also denounced Palestinian Authority security coordination with Israel, demanding that it come to an end immediately. She emphasized that the strike would continue to grow, with an increasing number of leaders joining the strike.

Sa’adat, Abu Ghoulmeh and the PFLP leaders are not alone in joining the strike; the Islamic Jihad movement announced that 16 members of its leadership in Ramon prison will join the hunger strike on Thursday, 4 May, in support of their fellow prisoners: Ziad Bseiso, Said Tubasi, Tamim Salem, Munif Abu Atwan, Iyad Abu Hashem, Mohammed Aridat, Mahmoud Kalibi, Mohammed Abdel-Hamid, Ahmed Bseiso, Abdel-Rahman Abu Libdeh, Ahmed al-Shanna, Hamza al-Haj Mohammed, Omar Abu al-Rub, Adnan Hussein, Abdel-Rahman Rayyan and Majdi Yassin.

The joint press conference included representatives of the PFLP, Hamas, Islamic Jihad, Fateh and the Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine as well as Issa Qaraqe of the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission.

The strike, which was launched by 1500 prisoners in Israeli jails on 17 April, Palestinian Prisoners Day, highlights key, basic demands: end to denial of family visits, the right to access distance higher education, appropriate medical care and treatment, and an end to solitary confinement and imprisonment without charge or trial.

The Ezzedine al-Qassam Brigades, the military wing of Hamas, also issued a statement on 2 May, warning the Israeli prison administration that it would take swift action if the demands of the prisoners did not find a response within 24 hours; it also noted that it would increase its demands for prisoner releases in exchange for captured Israelis held in Gaza on a daily basis so long as the strike continues with no action to implement the prisoners’ demands.

Among the striking prisoners are three Jordanian prisoners in Israeli jails, Riad Saleh, Abdallah Abu Jaber and Raafat al-Asa’s, out of the 23 Jordanian prisoners in Israeli jails. The National Committee for Imprisoned and Missing Jordanians issued a statement on 3 May highlighting their involvement in the strike and urging international and Arab action to support the hunger strikers.  Also participating in the hunger strike is Syrian prisoner in Israeli jails Sidqi al-Maqt, from the occupied Syrian Golan Heights. Al-Maqt joined the strike on 19 April, its third day. “I salute, from the heart of Israeli jails, the souls of all martyrs of Syria and Arab nations. The hunger pains in our empty stomachs are a battle towards the victory of our humanity and national dignity,” he said.

Since the strike began, over 20 prisoners have been taken to hospitals and clinics and a number of prisoners have reportedly fainted during the strike. The prisoners consume only salt and water during the strike, without additives, vitamins or other supplements.

Prisoners have faced sharp repression since the strike began – with hundreds of prisoners transferred, many leaders ordered into solitary confinement and hunger strikers widely denied legal visits or family visits. A hearing will take place in the Israeli Supreme Court today, Wednesday, 3 May, in response to a petition filed by Adalah and the Prisoners’ Affairs Commission demanding legal visits with their imprisoned hunger-striking clients. The hearing will convene at 11:30 am in Jerusalem.

Samidoun Palestinian Prisoner Solidarity Network urges the escalation of international support and solidarity just as the prisoners are escalating their strike. Students on campuses throughout Europe are organizing hunger strike solidarity actions while a growing number of cities and towns are hosting actions and demonstrations. It is critical to break the isolation imposed by the Israeli state with broader, wider, louder and stronger international solidarity with the Palestinian prisoners as they continue their valiant struggle in the Strike of Freedom and Dignity.